Mr. Hubert. But that’s all it amounted to, just that you had counted the money for him?

Mr. Paul. That’s all—I would bring it downstairs—he never carried it with him actually—I don’t know why he carried so much money the last time. Actually, he used to throw it in the back of the car in the trunk and he said, “That’s the place that nobody looks.”

Mr. Hubert. You mean you have known him to go home with money in the sack and he never put it on his person at all?

Mr. Paul. No—in the back of the car.

Mr. Hubert. Even when he parked his car at night he wouldn’t take it upstairs?

Mr. Paul. What do you mean—no; he never took it up to the house—he left it in the car.

Mr. Hubert. Did you ever have occasion to know how much money he had around like that?

Mr. Paul. No, sir.

Mr. Hubert. Well, of course, you know, I suppose, from the newspapers and what you have heard that when he was arrested he had altogether on his person and in the car an so forth, something in excess——

Mr. Paul. It was in the car too, wasn’t it?